Tiemo Hollmann:

Nowadays, with the new "app" paradigm on mobile phones and tablets the user
has forgotten that these nice tiny little icons on their smartphones are
also "software" with well-definied requirements and  and investment to be
produced. And the OEMs like Apple with their automated system updates show
the users a brave new world and pretend that the user hasn't to care about
anything anymore. All bets are off. The user doesn't cares anymore about
anything and just hits the button "install new system" and expects that
everything runs smooth or even better as before.

> In opposite to classical software, where I can sell a new version or
> an update with costs for a new system version neither Apple nor
> Google have implemented this possibility for me. There are no updates
> with cost.

> What are your thoughts about this subject?

It's designed to be truly perfect for Apple/Google. And supposedly "perfect" for the customer.

But not always for the developer. High standard, low price. With those system updates factored in and no upgrade fees, not the most "sustainable" model. We have to be creative to make it work.

And not always "perfect" for the customer. Dumbing things down can backfire. Apple changes OS more often than people change underwear, but users may not understand the implications.

Even on desktop computers, the auto update paradigm can be a trap. I unthinkingly agreed to a web browser update, and the new version requires so much memory that I can hardly multitask on this machine.

Here's a case study:

<http://blog.shiftyjelly.com/2012/08/17/paid-upgrades-on-ios-the-greedy-developer-guide/>

It concludes:

"There's no way to release a paid update on the iOS App Store, you have to release a new app....Apple will probably never support this, and it's time as developers we stopped this crazy 'race to the bottom free updates for ever' mentality, and start restoring the notion that developers also need to get paid, and there's no inherent weirdness or shame in that."

I've seen companies using new replacement apps, new other apps, new in-app purchases, and for some industries even subscription services. I hope you find a good solution for the paid upgrades!

Best wishes,

Curry Kenworthy

Custom Software Development
http://curryk.com/consulting/

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